Good morning. When you think of The Villages, you don't typically think of a place with many political divides. The deep red retirement community has been a reliable — and growing — Republican stronghold. But the residents there are torn over the idea of a potential clash between former president Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis in a presidential primary. Reporter Hannah Critchfield went there to hear the residents work through the looming conflict. — Emily L. Mahoney, emahoney@tampabay.com |
Lawsuits reveal inner workings of DeSantis' office |
The Rundown: The high-profile trial to decide the legality of DeSantis' removal of Hillsborough State Attorney Andrew Warren is underway in Tallahassee this week. Just two days in, it's already given the public a deep behind-the-scenes look at what led up to the move by DeSantis, which shook the Tampa Bay region and broadened the use of the powers of his office. We also learned about how the governor's staff was working at first to identify Warren as a prosecutor who should be removed, then determined the strategy for how they would portray the move to the public. Yesterday, Warren's lawyers highlighted how the governor's office mostly talked to Republicans when it came to digging into Warren. The judge, too, seemed skeptical of their research methods. DeSantis' public safety czar, Larry Keefe, was heavily involved in the entire process. He was the first one to set out to try to identify "woke" prosecutors in Florida, he said. Keefe also personally appeared in Warren's office with two sheriff's deputies to escort him out once the suspension order was issued. Some members of DeSantis' communications staff also got in trouble with the governor by appearing too publicly giddy about the suspension, the trial has revealed. One high-profile staffer, Christina Pushaw, was "taken to the proverbial woodshed” by DeSantis, according to the governor's lawyer, after she tweeted before the announcement that people should "prepare for the liberal media meltdown of the year." A little over a week later, she announced she would be leaving the governor's office for a role with the campaign. Read on for lots more fascinating details. Or delve into four highlights from the first day of the trial to better understand some of the key legal questions. This isn't the only legal tangle shining a spotlight on DeSantis' top aides. Keefe and the governor's chief of staff, James Uthmeier, were also recently added in the lawsuit over the migrant flights to Martha's Vineyard. Documents involved in that lawsuit have similarly showed how staffers in the governor's office were key figures in putting those flights together. But the governor's office is continuing to wrangle over public records in a related flights lawsuit, prompting one watchdog group to ask a judge to charge the administration with contempt of court. |
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